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"Here, sit down," Jessie hurried on, darting towards a chair and setting it for him beside the stove. "You're sick, sure," she declared, peering into his pale face, as he silently, almost helplessly, obeyed her. "It's the sun," she went on. "That's what it is--driving in the sun all yesterday. It's--it's been too much for you."
Again the man pa.s.sed a hand across his brow. But this time he shook his head.
"'Tain't the sun, Jess," he said vaguely. "It's--it's oil!"
For a moment the woman stared. Then she turned to the gaping twins, and hustled them out of the room to play. Poor Zip's head had suddenly gone wrong, she believed, and--
But as she came back from the door she found that he had risen from the chair in which she had set him, and was standing looking at her, and through her, and beyond her, as though she were not there at all.
And in an instant she was at his side, with an arm thrown protectingly about his shoulders.
"Tell me, Zip--oh, tell me, dear, what's wrong? Surely--surely, after all that has gone--Oh, tell me! Don't keep me in suspense. Is--is it James?" she finished up in a terrified whisper.
The mention of that detested name had instant effect. Scipio's face cleared, and the dazed look of his eyes vanished as if by magic. He shook his head.
"James is dead," he said simply. And Jessie breathed a sigh of such relief that even he observed it, and it gladdened him. "Yes," he went on, "James is sure dead. Wild Bill done him up and his whole gang. But Bill's gone, too."
"Bill, too?" Jessie murmured.
Scipio nodded; and perplexity stole over his face again.
"Yes. I--I don't seem to understand. Y'see, he done James up, an'--an'
James done him up--sort o' mutual. Y'see, they told me the rights of it, but--but ther's so many things I--I don't seem to got room for them all in my head. It seems, too, that Bill had quite a piece of money. An' he's kind of given it to the kids. I--I don't--"
"How much?" demanded the practical feminine.
"Seventy thousand dollars," replied the bewildered man.
"Seventy thou--Who told you?"
"Why--Minky. Said he'd got it all. But--but that ain't the worst."
"Worst?"
Jessie was smiling now--smiling with that motherly, protecting confidence so wonderfully womanly.
Scipio nodded; and his eyes sought hers for encouragement.
"Ther's the oil, millions an' millions of it--gallons, I mean."
"Oil? Millions of gallons? Oh, Zip, do--do be sensible."
Jessie stood before him, and his worried look seemed to have found a reflection upon her handsome face.
"It isn't me. It ain't my fault. It sure ain't, Jess," he declared wistfully. "I've seen it. It's there. My pore claim's jest drowned with it. I'll never find that gold now--not if I was to pump a year.
It's just bubbling up an' up out o' the bowels of the earth, an'--an'
Minky says I'll have to set up pumps an' things, an' he's goin' to help me. So is Sunny Oak, an' Toby, an' Sandy, an' he sez we'll find the gold sure if we pump the oil. Sez it's there, an' I'll be rich as Rockefeller an' all them millionaires. But I can't seem to see it, if the gold's drownded in that messy, smelly oil. Maybe you ken see.
You're quicker'n me. You--"
But Jessie never let him finish.
"Oil?" she cried, her eyes swimming with tears of joy and gentle affection for the simple soul so incapable of grasping anything but his own single purpose. "Oil?" she cried. "Oh, Zip, don't you understand? Don't you see? It's oil--coal-oil. You've been searching for gold and found oil. And there's millions of dollars in coal-oil."
But the little man's face dropped.
"Seems a pity," he said dispiritedly. "I could 'a' swore ther' was gold there--I sure could. I'd have found it, too--if the oil hadn't washed us out. Bill thought so, too; an' Bill was right smart. Guess we'll find it, though, after we pumped the oil."
Suddenly the woman reached out both arms and laid her hands upon his diminutive shoulders. Her eyes had grown very tender.
"Zip," she cried gently, "Zip, I think G.o.d has been very good to me.
He's been kinder to me than He has been to you. You deserve His goodness; I don't. And yet He's given me a man with a heart of--of gold. He's given me a man whose love I have trampled under-foot and flung away. He's given me a man who, by his own simple honesty, his goodness, has shown me the road to perfect happiness. He's given me all this in return for a sin that can never be wiped out--"
But suddenly Scipio freed himself from the gentle grasp of her restraining hands, and caught her in his arms.
"Don't you--don't you to say it, Jess," he cried, all his great love s.h.i.+ning in his eyes. His perplexity and regret were all gone now, and only had he thought of his love. "Don't you to say nuthin' against yourself. You're my wife--my Jessie. An' as long as I've got life I don't want nothin' else--but my Jessie. Say, gal, I do love you."
"And--and--oh, if you can only believe me, Zip, I love you."
The man reached up and drew the woman's face down to his, and kissed her on the lips.
"It don't matter 'bout not finding that gold now," he cried, and kissed her again.
"No, it--"
"Say, momma, ain't it dinner yet?"
"Ess, me want din-din."
The man and woman sprang guiltily apart before the wondering eyes of their children, and the next moment both of the small creatures were caught up and hugged in loving arms.
"Why, sure, kiddies," cried Scipio, his face wreathed in happy smiles.
"Momma's got dinner all fixed--so come right along."
THE END